Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 326, Ed. 1 Friday, October 13, 2000 Page: 2 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
►♦> f • *• f ♦ ^ 4 • ■?
PAGE TWO-Napulp« tOkla.i Herald. Friday. October U. JOtH)
Veterans deserve recognition
as defenders of our freedom
DKAR ABBY: 1 am responding to
the letters you printed earlier this year
encouraging velerans to speak to stu-
dents about their military experiences.
In recent years. I had noticed less and
less recognition ot this holiday in
schools and realized that unless we
teach our children about the valuable
contributions of all veterans, they will
be forgotten So. for the past two years
I have organi/ed a Veterans Day as-
sembly for students and staff at Van
Buren Flemeniary School in Cedar
Kapids. Iowa. Our assemblies have
been successful and greatly appreciat-
ed by student' staff and local veterans.
A terrific resource tor schools plan
ning a Veterans Day program is avail-
able at our Web site www.va.gov/pub-
afT/vetsday/index him. Our site
contains ideas to use with students
from kindergarten to high sc hvxil
The school also honors veterans
w ith a "Wall ot Stats ' Near the end ot
October, each student is given a note
with red. white and blue paper stars at-
tached to take home I hc instructions
are for each family to talk about veler
ans in their family Students are to
write on the stars the names of any
family members or friends who have
served in the military When the stars
are returned to school, they are placed
in random order on the Wall of Stars"
to create a visual thank-you to all vet-
erans During November conferences,
students enjoy pointing out to their par-
ents the stars they have placed on (he
board
I recommend that all parents and
educators use Veterans Dav as an op-
portunity to teach their students about
the contributions and sacrifices veter-
ans have made so that we may enjoy
our ntanv freedoms Kathv Shelton
DEAR KATHV W hat a wonderful
way to honor veterans \nd as you sug
gested. it's an idea that can be used by
Dear
Abby
By ABIGAIL
VANBUREN
1
Today in History
Today is Monday. Oct. 13, the
287th day of 2000 There are 79 days
left in the year
Today s Highlight in History:
On Oct 13.1792 the cornerstone
of the executive mansion, later
known as the Wfate House, was laid
dunng a ceremony in the Distnct of
Columbia
On this date-
In A D 54 Roman emperor
Claudius I died aftet being poisoned
by his wife. Agrippina
In 1775 the t]^d its.qrifltns
as the Continental Congross ordered
the const'izN 1 fleet.
In 1843 the .Jewish organization
B rvai B nth was founded m New York
City
In 1845. Texas ratified a state con-
stitution
In 1943 Italy declared war on
German , its one-time Axis partner.
In 1944, American troops entered
Aachen. Germany
In 1944, British and Greek ad-
vance units landed at Piraeus dunng
World War II
In 1960. Richard M Nixon and
John F Kennedy participated in the
third televised debate ot their presi-
dential campaign
In 1962. Whos Afraid of Virginia
Woolf9" by Edward Albee opened on
Broadway
In 1974, longtime television host
Ed Sullivan died in New York City at
age 72
Ten years ago: At the start of a
three-day conference in Jiddah,
Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of
Kuwait promised greater democracy
for the emirate if it were freed from
Iraqi occupation In Lebanon, rebel
Christian Gen Michel Aoun ended
his mutiny against the government.
Le Due Tho, co-founder of the
Vietnamese Communist Party died
m Hanoi at age 79
Five years ago: British physicist
Joseph Rotblat and the anti-nuclear
group he founded, the Pugwash
Conference, were named winners of
the 1995 Nobel Peace Pnze
One year ago: The Senate de-
feated the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty. 51-48 In Boulder, Colo. the
JonBenet Ramsey grand jury was
dismissed after. 13 months ot work
with prosecutors saying there wasn’t
enough evidence to charge anyone
in the 6-year-olds strangulation
Robert A Mundell of Columbia
University won the Nobel Prize for
economic sciences.
Today s Birthdays: Editonal car-
toonist Herblock is 91 Comedian
Nipsey Russell is 76 Lady Thatcher,
former British prime minister, is 75.
Playwright Frank D Gilroy is 75 Actor
Clift Gorman is 64 Gospel singer
Shirley Caesar is 62 Actress Melinda
Dillon is 61 Singer-musician Paul
Simon is 59 Actress Pamela Tiffin is
58 Musician Robert Lamm
(Chicago) is 56 Actor Demond
Wilson is 54 Country singer Lacy J.
Dalton is 54 Singer-musician
Sammy Hagar is 53. Actor John
Lone is 48 Model Beverly Johnson is
48 Writer-producer Chris Carter
(The X-FHes") is 43.
Thought for Today: There are
some things one can only achieve by
a deliberate leap in the opposite di-
rection One has to go abroad in or-
der to find the home one has lost."
— Franz Kafka,
Austrian author (1883-1924).
AccuWeather® 10-Day Forecast for Sapulpa, OK
All maps, forecasts and data provided by AccuWeather. Inc. © 2000
AccuWeather.com
Tonight
Showers:
cloudy with a
warm breeze
60
Saturday
Cloudy with a
tew showers,
breezy
73/58
Sunday
Rather
cloudy
72/48
Monday
Comfortable
with sun and
clouds
70/48
Tuesday
Plenty ot sun-
shine.
72/49
Wednesday
A shower
with sun-
shine
74/51
Thursday
A tew show
ers with some
sun.
72/55
Friday
Partly sunny.
78/54
Saturday
Plenty ot sun-
shine
80/57
Sunday
Partly sunny
80/57
schools, organizations, clubs am)
neighborhoods on Veterans Day,
Saturday. Nov. 11.
Veterans Day commemorates
the signing of the armistice that ended
World War I. Nov. 11. 1918 (The year
I was bom!) In 1919. President
Wmxlrow Wilson proclaimed Nov. 11
Armistice Day as a day of remem-
brance. and in 1938 the date became a
federal holiday In 1934. the name was
changed by Congress to Veterans Day
to honor all U S. veterans
Readers. a reminder:
Hundreds of thousands of our service
members gave their lives so that we
can live in a free country and elect our
leaders by voting. If you haven't al-
ready done so. there may still be time
to register to vote. Call your local reg-
istrar of voters for more information.
DF.AR ABBY: I am searching fora
tradition or custom for my daughter's
13th birthday I have heard of sweet lb
parlies, but is there something for a
sweet 13-year-old going from child-
hood to her teen years? — Manteca,
('.ilit . Mother
DEAR MOTHER: Since the age
of 13 marks the official end of her days
as a “girl" and the beginning of her
years as a young woman, take your
daughter out to dinner to celebrate.
Consider including some of her older
female relatives who are especially
close to her
It will be an occasion she will re-
member for the rest ot her life.
National Summary
A Ip* showers are likely tomorrow over north-
ern Marne while me rest o< the East is warm
and dry Scattered showers and thunderstorms
wet occur from me Great Lakes to Terms The
northern Rockies can expect showers and
some high elevation snow A lew showeis are
likely over me Pacific Northwest
AccuWeather UV Index
Tomorrow Sunday 0-2 m*i
9am ...........1..................1
Noon 1......... 3 M™1
3pm .... 1 1
10« very high
National Forecast for Saturday. October 14
; '0?I3» r»TornET8iu asTisT toe pi
World Cities
»*»*!*»*
.......
V Rars FranriM-n
T 6154
l V 1
UW1V9T
v*crr
■Hflagto
-TOO “
Sunns# tomorrow
Suns#t tomorrow night
Moon Phases
7 30am
6 50pm
am
na/ro
Fu«
Oct 13
Lasl
Ocl 20
on
U S. Cities
City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Asheville
Atlanta
Baltimore
Bismarck
Boston
Buffalo
Chicago
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Oct 27
First
Nov 4
fTTD Showers
rrrr T-storms
jVrl Rain Shown are noon positrons ot weather systems and Cold front
? Flurries precipitation Temperature bands mdical# highs tor _ r_
LOO Snow the day Forecast higtVtow temperatures are vvarm ,rom
|ce shown tor selected cities Stationary tront
Catch the latest area ms In the Sapulpa Herald:
Stocks of Local Interest
FRIDAY STOCKS
IndttMnaU
10.054 56
Kimberly Clark Carp
/KMB
Volume
60.607.610
K Man Corp
/KM
Adv/Dec/lJnch
779/1.122/514
Kinder Morgan Energy
/KMP
Gold
$271W-S275 80
McDonalds Corp
/MO)
Silver
$4 86 $4 92
Media General A
/MHG A
NASDAQ
BOK Financial ( «*rp /BOKF IK l/H
Iirlh.ii/cAmmLa /D/A 16 1/4
LanciiMr* C olon> Ojrp /IANO 24 1/2
O'Reilly Automnme /OKI V 14 Mi -5/16
WorldCom /WCOM V 1/4 ♦!/*
NYSE
ATATCorp n
AMR Corp /AMR
Auton.iun Inc /AN
Boon):
Carlitlr C'orp /CSI
Citigroup lik fC
Compaq Computer /0*0
Dupont /DO
Ford Motor Co A
Cienerul Motor a Corp /CM
Home Depot. Inc /HD
IMCO Recycling /IMR
IBM /IHM
liMenuiiorul fechnology /ITX
J C NM)
24 +1/*
29 I S/16
5 7/8
56 V8 >1/4
IK VI6 ♦ 1/16
47 9/16
23119 40 56
24 1/16
56 9/16
35 7/16 *9/16
5 VI6
105 11/16+2 9/16
31/: *1/16
9 1/16 +VI6
t MJ.ihoma (ia> A hlectncAXil:
-
< As idem.11 Petroleum /OXY
Phillips Petroleum /P
(Quaker Chemical Corp /K\k R
Qwest l ommumcationc /Q
RAB Falcon Corp. /FIX'
Seals Roebuck A Co /S
SBC Communications /SBC
Shaw Croup. Inc /SCR
Sunoco. Inc /SUN
le&acj /rX
TywHi FYxid* /I SN
Wal Man Store* /WMT
Walt Disney Co /DIS
Williams Cm /WMB
MUTUAL FUNDS
Income Fund of America
I ord Ahheti US Govt
Putnam High Yield Trusl
Washington Mutual Invest
Colonial Tax (tempi
Information Furnished by Edward Jones. Sapulpa. OK
Jim Kirkpatrick
w w w.edwardjo«e%.c»»m
Is your IRA working as hard as it should?
Edwardjones
Saturday
Hi Lo W
Sunday
HI Lo W
City
Saturday
HI Lo W
Sunday
HI Lo W
City
Saturday
HI Lo W
Sunday
HI Lo W
64
40
s
66
42
8
Helena
54
32
PC
56
35
sh
Orlando
84
62
pc
84
62
8
46
37
sh
45
35
r
Houston
86
64
PC
86
• »
c
Philadelphia
78
56
8
76
54
pc
76
46
s
77
47
8
Kansas City
72
50
sh
64
48
sh
Phoenix
82
60
8
84
60
8
82
52
s
eo
54
8
Las Vegas
78
52
8
76
54
8
Pittsburgh
75
51
8
70
46
pc
79
52
8
79
54
pc
LOS Angeles
74
58
8
74
60
pc
Raleigh
60
48
8
80
52
pc
51
33
pc
52-
31
c
Louisville
78
53
8
73
51
c
Reno
65
36
8
63
35
s
78
60
pc
74
52
c
Miami
82
70
pc
84
70
8
St Louis
72
57
sh
69
51
sr
72
52
pc
68
46
c
Milwaukee
66
48
sh
61
43
sh
San Diego
68
58
8
72
61
pc
70
52
sh
64
46
c
Nashville
84
52
8
75
52
8
Seattle
56
46
sh
58
48
c
74
54
pc
70
48
8h
New Orleans
82
60
8
82
a
pc
Tampa
86
65
8
84
61
8
78
66
sh
74
64
t
New (fork
76
60
8
74
58
pc
Tucson
81
53
8
81
53
8
59
34
pc
63
36
8
Oklahoma City
73
57
sh
72
48
c
Washington
80
56
8
78
58
pc
Saturday
Sunday
City
HI
LO
w
HI
Lo
w
Amsterdam
57
44
pc
57
54
PC
Athens
77
61
s
77
M
8
Auckland
63
51
8
64
57
8
Bei|ing
50
34
8
57
43
8
Belgrade
79
55
B
74
46
8
Berlin
61
52
C
66
57
C
Budapest
77
55
s
71
47
8
Buenos Aires
64
55
PC
66
59
PC
Cairo
84
64
s
87
6f
8
49
34
sh
53
29
PC
Damascus
75
54
c
72
46
PC
Edmonton
5t
35
c
52
34
sh
Frankfurt
63
47
pc
67
56
c
Geneva
•1
52
r
65
50
c
Havana
82
68
8
80
68
8
Helsinki
55
43
r
54
42
PC
Hong Kong
77
72
r
83
•o
c
Istanbul
70
54
8
72
57
s
Jerusalem
64
55
sh
69
50
PC
Johannesburg
93
59
8
92
60
8
Lisbon
64
56
C
72
55
pc
Undon
54
43
pc
57
46
PC
Mexico City
66
54
sh
61
59
r
Moscow
52
46
c
57
43
sh
New Delhi
95
70
pc
100
62
8
Riyadh
97
73
8
97
66
8
Manila
88
74
C
87
75
C
Pans
57
46
c
56
46
sh
Rome
84
63
t
69
55
r
Seoul
58
44
PC
66
41
8
Shanghai
67
55
c
69
56
PC
Singapore
88
79
c
89
76
c
Sydney
62
48
sh
62
50
c
Tokyo
66
60
PC
67
58
sh
Vienna
73
57
pc
72
52
pc
Warsaw
70
54
PC
66
54
pc
Weather (W| • sunny, pc partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showors. l-thundecstorms.
r-ram ct-snow (lurries, sn-snow. i-ice
The Bank With Time
For You...and the
weather forecast too!
www.anbt-ok.com
AMERICAN NATIONAL
Bank and Trust Company
i Sapulpa, Oklahoma
Sapulpa, Sand Springs, Kellyville, Mounds, Beggs and Berryhill
For Time and
Temperature,
call 224-4200
MEMBER F.D.I.C.
Budget bargainers narrow
differences to three bills
Death Notices
56 11/16.1/4
5 15/16
47 1/4 -1/16
28 1/8 -1/4
16 05 ,0 12
20 1/8 .1/16
41 7/8 0/4
21 1/16 5/8
/,s 1/4 I VI6
I
• 45 1/16
V) 1/16
.1091 *0 29
49 1/8 V4
75 1/2 -2 1/4
27 15/16
55 1/2
10 11/16
44 1/16 .!/l6
18 1/16
421/4 .1/16
1519- 1611
2 48 — 2 60
9 11 — 9 59
28 17— 10 10
12 68 - II 11
WASHINGTON (AP) — budget
bargainers have whittled their differ-
ences to three overdue spending bills,
but fights over federal school aid. im-
migration and other hot political issues
w ill keep Congress working at least in-
to next week.
Four more spending bills for the
new fiscal year worth more than $lb<>
billion won Senate approval ITiursdav
as lawmakers provided extra money
tor everything from the Internal
Revenue Service to public housing
Lasing passage were hundreds of mil
lions of dollars in projects for legisla-
tors' home districts, a highly sought
prize less than a month from Election
Day
With President Clinton having
signed three of the 13 spending meas-
ures and three more all but complete,
three other bills remained that were
still causing headaches. Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott. R-Mixs..
predicted that they could he finished by
next Thursday so Congress could ad-
journ and lawmakers could focus on
re-election campaigns.
"At some point, everybody’s got to
get ambitious to complete the work
and leave." Lott told reporters.
Democrats, however, chose to focus
on education, a big issue in this year's
presidential campaign. Clinton wants
nearly $3 billion to help communities
hire teachers and rebuild schools, but
Republicans want to give local officials
freedom to use the money for whichev-
er educational needs they have.
"This is something that is needed
and desired by voters all across this
country," said House Minority Leader
Dick Gephardt. D-Mo “Let’s do the
one thing that most helps."
Twelve days after the start of fiscal
2001. the Senate gave final legislative
approval to a package combining $30.3
billion for the Treasury Department.
$2.5 billion for Congress' own opera-
tions, and a phaseout of the 3 percent
federal tax on telephones Senate pas-
sage was by 58-37, and Clinton's sig-
nature was expected.
The measure would also let mem-
bers of Congress gel a $3.8<X) pay raise
in January to $I45.HX).
By 87-8. the Senate also approved
two other hills that were combined: a
Jim Kirkpatrick 227*1292
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The following candidates
have authorized the
Sapulpa Daily Herald to
announce their candida-
cy for political office.
LOU MARTIN
Republican
State House
of Representatives
District 30
Paid lor by Friends ot Lou Martin
MIKE TYLER
Democrat
State House of
Representatives
District 30
Paid tor by Committee to Elect Tyler.
Bob Baxter Treasurer
$107 billion measure financing veter-
ans. housing, env ironmcnt and science
programs and a $23.6 billion bill for
energy and water projects. House pas-
sage was expected next week, and
Clinton will sign the measure.
The three remaining bills cover six
Cabinet departments, dozens of other
agencies and foreign aid Besides
schools, they also carry disputes over
Central American immigration, ex-
panding hale enmes laws, coastal con-
servation and other hot-button issues.
Yet amid the parties' finger-point-
ing. their bargainers worked hand-in-
hand to deliver projects for lawmakers
from all over the country.
The veterans-housing bill bore
roughly $9<X) million in home-district
projects, including water and sewage
grants, economic development aid and
NASA research projects for universi-
ties.
These included $35 million for
drinking water and wastewater projects
for rural Alaska, home of Senate
Appropriations Committee Chairman
Ted Stevens. Sen. Slade Gorton. R-
Wash.. who faces a tough re-election
fight, took credit tor $8 million m proj-
ects in his state. And North Dakota's
congressional delegation won more
than $60 million for water and commu-
nity development projects, including
$1.5 million to build a visitors' center
in Williston. N.D., with exhibit* on the
Lewis and Clark expedition. The ener-
gy-water bill, initially vetoed by
Clinton for language blocking pro-
posed new water flows for the
Missouri River, had that language re-
moved. But the measure also bore $26
million for six water projects in New
York. Alabama. Kentucky. Tennessee
and St. Lixiis that were not in the earli
cr bill.
Negotiators on a separate measure
financing the Commerce. State and
Justice departments were adding
roughly $1.5 billion to its $36 billion
price tag That included more money
for Uniied Nations peacekeeping,
coastal land conservation, hiring local
police officers and legal aid for the
poor In virtually every case, spending
controlled by the bills was growing
well beyond initial congressional ver-
sions. Overall, the 13 bills were on
track to exceed the $625,billion target
Congress set in Apnl by about $30 bil-
lion and to exceed Clinton's February
budget by $17 billion. The rest of the
$1.8 trillion budget covers automatical-
ly made payments such as Social
Security and interest on the debt.
HI NT. Milton — Services are
pending
Green Hill Funeral Home of
Sapulpa is in charge of arrangements
Mr Hunt. XX. ot lulsa. died
Thursday. Oct. 12. 2000 He was bom
Sept. 29. 1917 in Crews, Texas. Mis
parents were Robert Hunt and Rilla
Dunn.
He was a retired electrician and he
served in the U.S. Navy.
WINCHESTER, Jeremy Wayne
— Funeral services will he at 10 a.m.
Saturday. Oct. 14. 2000 in the Smith
Funeral Home Chapel with Herschel
Martin officiating.
Interment will follow in the Floral
Haven Cemetery under the direction
of Smith Funeral Home of Sapulpa.
Mr Winchester. 30. of Tulsa, died
Thursdav. Oct 12. 2(KHi at x.nnt
Francis Hospital in Tulsa He was
born June 29. 1970 and had lived in
the area all his life.
He was a graduate of Central High
Schixil and worked as a self employed
roofer.
White House says Clinton will
veto House bankruptcy bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - A presi-
dential veto looms over legislation
making it harder for people to erase
credit card and other ilebts in bankrupt-
cy court. The measure has cleared live
House and is moving toward a vote in
the Senate.
On Thursday. the White House said
President Clinton — who supports a
bankruptcy law overhaul in principle
— would veto the bipartisan measure
approved by lawmakers on a voice vote
after a fairly brief debate. With
Congress racing to adjourn next week,
it was doubtful lawmakers would have
an opportunity to override his action
Across the Capitol in the Senate, a
staunch opponent. Sen. Paul Wellstone.
D-Minn., has threatened to block the
measure. However, his power to ob-
struct legislation is limited, and Senate
Democratic leaders, including Minority
Leader Tom Daschle. D-S.D., have ex-
pressed support for putting it to a vote
soon That could occur next week.
The measure has divided
Democratic lawmakers Its proponents
in both parties, who have been pushing
such legislation for three years, have re-
ceived millions of dollars in campaign
money from banks and credit card
companies this election year.
In House debate, supporters pointed
to the rapid rise in bankruptcy tilings in
recent years — 1.4 million in 1998 —
as evidence of rampant abuse ot the
bankruptcy court system. They main-
tained the abuses create a "hidden lax"
of at least $400 a year on each
American family in the form of higher
interest rates passed on by consumer
credit businesses and other charges.
"Clearly this nation's bankruptcy
system is broken when it enables indi-
viduals to avoid paying their debts,"
Rep. Jim Moran. D-Va.. said before the
vote. "Bankruptcy reform is not a
Republican or a Democratic issue. It's
COUNTRY FAIR
Saturday
October 14, 2000
Fiom 2:00pm-????
Kiefer City Park
FUN! GAMES! PRIZES!
FOOD! BALLOONS! FACE PAINTING!
Come Join Us! -ffo
Hope To See You There!
proceeds go to
KIEFER COMMUNITY
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
To rebuild after the flood
a
a consumer issue."
The bill would establish a complex
mathematical formula for determining
w hether debtors are able to repay part
of their debts under a court superv ised
plan and therefore would not be al-
lowed to have them dissolved.
But opponents said the legislation
would hurt families hit by job loss, cat-
astrophic medical expenses and other
hanlships that push them over the edge
financially, as well as single mothers
and their children seeking alimony am)
support payments from bankrupt fa-
thers
"This is a mean-spinted bill." de-
clared Michigan Rep John Conyers,
the House Judiciary Committee's sen-
ior Democrat.
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney
later called it "a heartless attack on
working families by powerful financial
institutions"
In mid-1999 and early this year, the
House and Senate passed differing ver-
sions of the legislation with veto-proof
margins
Clinton threatened twice jn June to
veto the bill as w ritten because he con-
sidered it unfair to ordinary debtors.
Ills national economic adviser. Gene
Sperling, said late last month that
Clinton still found it unacceptable de-
spite recent changes.
If the bankruptcy measure again
wins a veto-proof majority in the
Senate. Clinton could choose to wait
until Congress adjourns before effec-
tively vetoing it by not signing it. there-
by depriving lawmakers of the chance
to override it in a new vote. By law. he
has 10 days from passage of the legis-
lation to wield his veto pen or not sign
it if Congress is out of session.
In a letter Thursday to House
Speaker Dennis Hasted, R III.,
Clinton's chief of staff John Podesta
said the bill "fails to address some cred-
itor abuses and disadvantages all
debtors to an extent unnecessary to
stem abuses by a Tew."
He said Clinton also objected to the
removal of a provision in the Senate-
passed bill prohibiting people found to
have violated laws protecting abortion
clinics from using bankruptcy proceed-
ings to escape fines and civil judg-
ments.
Hanks, savings and loans, credit
card companies and other consumer fi-
nance businesses spent some $6 million
on donations to political candidates and
party-building activities between Jan. I
and June 30. according to the group
Common Cause. The total included
$17 million from the five U.S. hanks
with the biggest credit-card businesses:
Citigroup, Bank One/First USA. MB-
NA. Bank of America and Chase
Manhattan.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View 14 places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Quinnelly, Lorrie J. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 326, Ed. 1 Friday, October 13, 2000, newspaper, October 13, 2000; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1504038/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.